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This post was originally published here on the Enova blog. As a programmer and a woman in tech, I am aware of a great need for allies and more managers to be leaders. The past few years I’ve learned how

This post was originally published on LinkedIn. Comments and likes should be made there – on the original post. Access. It’s a word representing a fundamental component of making things possible. If a farmer doesn’t have access to water, how

This post was originally published on LinkedIn. Comments and likes should be made there – on the original post. Dear ‘well-raised’ men, For some reason, you were taught to (and ‘society’ re-enforced that you should) hold the door open for people

This post was originally published on LinkedIn. Comments and likes should be made there – on the original post. For awhile now I’ve been aware that female programmers tend to focus on proper nouns in their LinkedIn skill list.

We’ve survived Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Today is a marvelously, ingeniously branded day to encourage charitable giving. As with all things, my take is a little different. Ways to Give That Don’t Require Money: Think of the most accomplished, amazing

This post was originally published on Braintree Payments’ blog, Strongly Typed here. To every woman who codes, I’ve been writing code myself for 17 years. As a female programmer (among other things), I’ve met a range of men who work

This post was originally published on the LXD @ Spartz blog on June 10, 2014. Whether someone is asking me how to learn Google Analytics for professional development reasons or I am teaching someone in-house at Spartz, I have put

This blog post was originally published on the LXD @ Spartz blog on June 17, 2014. Why are these essential things to do before you start collecting data? Because Google Analytics (GA) only applies these changes going forward, it will